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Swann [Import] [Paperback]

Carol Shields (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Flamingo; New Ed edition (January 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0006550606
  • ISBN-13: 978-0006550600
  • Product Dimensions: 7.6 x 5.1 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.5 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #6,181,383 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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4 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Magic flows from her pen ..., February 24, 2001
This review is from: Swann (Paperback)
It comes as quite a shock at the beginning of the fifth chapter of "Swann" to be reminded that Sarah Maloney, Morton Jimroy, Rose Hindmarch and Frederick Cuzzi area all fictional characters. By that time, having read each of their brushes with Mary Swann (who is also fictitious) and her poetry, you feel that you'd recognize them in a crowd.

In this early novel, Carol Shields shows the talent developed in later works, especially her penchant for using disparate literary styles to tell the story. Her characters are so beautifully formed; they leap from the page and demand you get to know them. Locations are so vividly described, you feel you could immediately find them, should you be transported to Chicago, Palo Alto, Nardeau or Kingston.

In 1965, within hours of submitting her body of work, written on scraps of paper and stored in a paper bag, to literary publisher and newspaper owner, Frederick Cruzzi, Mary Swann, a "primitive" poet from rural Canada, was hacked to pieces by her violent brute of a husband. The 125 poems were subsequently published in a small, stapled pamphlet with a limited run of 250 copies, most of which Cruzzi and his wife ended up giving away.

Many years after publication, Sarah Maloney, a feminist scholar of some note, found a copy in the limited selection or reading material in a remote cottage on a lake in Wisconsin, where she'd gone to have a good long, hard think about her life. Intrigued, she set out to find out more about Swann and her poetry, and soon was in correspondence with a select little group of assorted fans and scholars, including pretentious Morton Jimroy, self-appointed biographer, spinsterly Rose Hindmarch, librarian who lent books to Swann, worldwise Frederick Cuzzi, publisher to whom Swann entrusted her work.

The present time of the book is 1987, and the first ever Swann Symposium is about to take place. Strange things start happening with Swann memorabilia - Sarah's copy of "Swann's Songs" can't be found; Cruzzi's house is burgled and the only things missing are the four copies of the pamphlet he'd retained; one of the two known photographs of Mary Swann goes missing from the Nardeau library.

In this fascinating tale, it's intriguing how the threads of Mary Swann's life slowly pull together, even as she seems to be disappearing forever and how the works of an extremely little known poet, dead for more than 20 years, cause such bitter rivalries, jealousies and criminal behaviour. But even as she becomes more ephemeral, her effect on her admirers becomes more profound.

The first four chapters, almost novellas, of this book titled "Mary Swan" in the British edition I found in my library, each tell of a central character's encounter with Swann and/or her work. The Swan Symposium, the final chapter, is written as a play, which I thought at first was a little precious. Then I realised that since it all took place in a hotel and was mostly dialogue anyway, what better way of expressing it. Readers are spared all the words normally used to pad dialogue out into sentences. "Bit part" players are given beautifully descriptive names like Butter Mouth, Merry Eyes, Silver Cufflinks, Woman with Turban, Woman in Pale Suede Boots, Wistful Demeanour and Crinkled Forehead - that's all you need to picture them.

"Swann" has been described as a "literary mystery" but it's not a traditional mystery with a detective following up clues - in fact, I think to categorise it as a mystery is to sell this rich and intriguing work short. If you want to categorise it at all, it's a beautifully subtle satire aimed at the pretentiousness found in the literary world. If any of Ms Shields' novels were worthy of a Pulitzer Prize, this is the one.

I've read several of Carol Shields works and, with the exception of "Stone Diaries", each has usurped the last as my favourite. This is a little worrying, since I've been working my way backwards through the list. I guess I'll have to stop now.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Soul of Poetess, July 27, 2000
This review is from: Swann (Paperback)
It is really difficult to determine genre of this undoubtedly excellent novel. A literary mystery? Yes, but only in its framework... A brilliant satire that derides the intellectual high society? Yes, especially in the last part of the book with its impressing gallery of ironically depicted persons without names but with picturesque sobriquets. Even at least three of four main characters of the novel are rather humorously delineated: a feminist who is fond of theoretically contemptible men; a biographer and misanthrope, an impotent with disorderly sexual fantasies; an old maiden with pretensions of personal significance... An experiment with literary form? Yes, it really transforms through the whole book, reaching its culmination in the end, crossing the border between novel and screenscript...

But I think that the author's conception is more profound: the novel is a serious attempt of philosophical comprehension of human personality. Mary Swann, a rural Canadian poet, was murdered by her brutal husband only hours after submitting her poems to local newspaper editor and publisher Frederic Cruzzi. She became famous posthumously, and now four different people - a scholar Sarah Maloney, a writer Morton Jimroy, a librarian Rose Hindmarch and Frederic Cruzzi are trying to understand Mary Swann and her poems. With their semi-empty souls and aspirations for mandane success and promotion, in their endeavors to grasp the meaning of her poems, they fail. They start reconstruction not of the real Mary Swann but her artificial image apropos their intensions.

So genuine understanding is impossible: Swann's life was devoid of external events, nobody knew her thoughts and yearnings. But a miracle happens - unsolved spirit of poetess via her naive poems commences to alter her readers...

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Intellectualism and reductionism of poor Mary Swann, March 24, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Swann (Paperback)
Mary Swann was considered by some to be a great poet whose life was tragically ended by a brutal husband. Some intellectuals will do almost anything to "expand" their reputation(s) and careers including dismissing as inconsequential friends and peers of this poet or better yet STEALING. Carol Shields book was such a joy to read I was sorry it ended. I loved the last section with all the character names (i.e.Wispy Blonde,Wimpy Grin,Ginger Ponytail,etc.)I've read all her books and for me this is her best.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
As recently as two years ago, when I was twenty-six, I dressed in ratty jeans and sweatshirt with lettering across the chest. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
silver cufflinks, water poems, rhyming dictionary
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mary Swann, Rose Hindmarch, Frederic Cruzzi, Sarah Maloney, Professor Lang, Willard Lang, Swann's Songs, Peregrine Press, Homer Hart, Miss Hindmarch, Frances Moore, Christmas Eve, Daisy Hart, Angus Swann, Ezra Pound, Marjorie Flanner, South Africa, Edna Ferber, Floyd Sears, John Starman, New York, Steering Committee, Stephen Stanhope, Emily Dickinson, The Poet's Corner
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